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Graham Bond - Love Is the Law

Love Is the Law
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Album Details: Love Is the Law

Release Date:01/01/1969
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Pro Reviews: Love Is the Law

  • All Music Guide

    Love Is the Law is the first of the two LPs Graham Bond recorded for the Pulsar label in the late 1960s after his move to the United States, and is the better of the pair by a wide margin. That doesn't mean, it should be cautioned, that it's that great, and it's considerably below the standard of the discs he cut in the UK in the mid'60s as the leader of the Graham Bond Organisation. That might not only be because he was missing musicians of the extremely high caliber of his supporting players in the Organisation; it might also be due to him having played everything himself on the LP, with the exception of drums (by Hal Blaine) and some soulful female backup vocals. Yet there's still substantial pleasure if that's the right word to use for a musician with such a demonic vocal, instrumental, and compositional flavor to be had from Bond's consistently spooky bluesrock organ and Mellotron. If his vocals are a bit croaky, and his lyrics (where odes to free love dovetail with dread and th...e occult) a bit creepy, that's part of the reason the music stands out even from the eclectic palette of late '60s rock; there's nothing else quite like it, even if it might not be his best work. The title track and "The World Will Soon Be Free" are certainly among the absolute highlights of his postOrganisation discography, and if the remake of "Our Love Will Come Shining Through" isn't up the level of the great obscure mid'60s UK 45 on which he first issued the song, it's still pretty good. If some of the lyrics seem a bit awkward and confused in their confluence of naive romanticism and ominous foreboding, they're made up for by some quite groovy bluesjazz organ riffs. Overall it sounds like the songwriting could have done with some polish and the arrangements with some fleshing out, but Bond fans will still find it worthwhile to seek out this rare LP. - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Graham Bond

An important, underappreciated figure of early British RB, Graham Bond is known in the U.S., if at all, for heading the group that Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker played in before they joined Cream. Originally an alto sax jazz player in fact, he was voted Britain's New Jazz Star in 1961 he met Bruce and Baker in 1962 after joining Alexis Koerner's Blues Incorporated, the ... Read more